- Reaction score
- 2,001
- Points
- 1,260
Jarnhamar said:10 year old girl seem to handle recoil better than the two grown men in the CNN clip.
I didn't watch it, but it reminded me of Charles Vacca,
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shooting_of_Charles_Vacca

Jarnhamar said:10 year old girl seem to handle recoil better than the two grown men in the CNN clip.
"When will CNN admit they are nothing more than a far-left activist group determined to attack conservatives?"
Quote from: Rifleman62 on Today at 07:16:18
https://mediaequalizer.com/martin-walsh/2018/02/cnn-reporter-hits-gun-range-it-couldnt-have-gone-worse
"When will CNN admit they are nothing more than a far-left activist group determined to attack conservatives?"
Rifleman62 said:You quoted me "When will CNN admit they are nothing more than a far-left activist group determined to attack conservatives?".
Rifleman62 said:OK, you quoted the source not me.
Til Valhall said:In that situation of the homeless guy with a knife and the potentially murderous old lady,
Til Valhall said:wouldn't you feel more comfortable in that church if you had a concealed gun? I'm pretty sure you would want one.
Til Valhall said:don't you think it's kind of absurd to need self-defense weapons in a church? I'm not religious at all, but I know that a church is a place where people should be able to feel comfortable and trust each other.
Til Valhall said:To me, the need for interpersonal trust within a congregation should also be extrapolated beyond a church to the general population of a country.
Til Valhall said:It's clear that high-trust societies, especially those with effective gun control, have less of a problem with crime.
Til Valhall said:Also, would you rather the crazy homeless person in the church to be playing with a paring knife, or a handgun that he got in the back alley last night? Fortunately here in Canada, it's harder, although not impossible for that homeless person to get a handgun in that manner.
Til Valhall said:I'm saying that should be the concern of the state. To protect citizens and keep the guns or any weapons out of "idle hands" as much as possible.
Loachman said:Then you presume incorrectly.
I have said, before, that if concealed carry permits were available here, I would get one, but would rarely (if ever) carry given the current threat level. I tend not to hang around likely target areas anyway - not out of fear, paranoia, or concern, but simply because such venues hold little to no interest.
Jarnhamar said:NEXT on CNN
Outrage! As CNN discovers children have access to high power Gatling guns. Thanks Trump!
Warning image may cause triggering.
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Til Valhall said:Right, I didn't mean that to be against you personally. I just get the sense that guns provide average people with a sense of control, for which the vast majority of the time is unnecessary and problematic.
My point is more against the "everybody gets a gun" second amendment reasoning, where millions of undisciplined, overconfident, and oftentimes paranoid people end up with the lion's share of weapons.
I was definitely not trying to put you in that category. A quick look at your profile shows that you're definitely not the average person. ;D
WeatherdoG said:That's an interesting view... The plebs shouldn't feel a sense of control in their lives? That sounds dangerously aristocratic.
Til Valhall said:I am a fan of meritocracy with equal opportunity.
It's funny when military people use the talking points of classical liberalism. Unfettered individual freedom and independence is relatively new in the world, and it contradicts old longstanding traditions embedded in military ethos.
[/philosophy_rant]
WeatherdoG said:Not to derail this too far, but who decides on the "merit" and the "equality" of opportunity? I'm detecting a hint of university student with a dash of overconfidence in one's own "merit".
pbi said:What? Really?
CNN is a business run for profit. It is part of corporate America, run by people who want to make lots of money. Like all MSM, they perform a useful purpose by counterbalancing the shrieking from the two outer wings of the political spectrum, (which immediately PO's those to the left and right of MSM) but IMHO it''s a huge leap to call them "left" because of that.
I think you will find that the "Left" in America (what there actually is of it...) regards all corporate media as shills for the One Percenters.
In my opinion people throw the word "left" around with total abandon, such that it apparently now means anybody who isn't a member of the Tea Party. I would argue that in the mainstream US political system there is no true "left": there are moderates and those slightly left of centre on some issues. The Communist Party is tiny and of zero importance. There is no US equivalent to the NDP, which is the only real "left" party of any potential in Canada (sorry Greens: you'll just never get there...)
So we should be arming ministers as well as teachers?Loachman said:I was in a church in Kingston a few years ago and was closely watching an obviously-mentally-troubled homeless fellow take a paring knife out of his backpack and wave it around below pew level.
Jed said:In my opinion people throw the word 'right' around with total abandon.
Not the point; your post simply continues reiterating the "yes" / "no" / "yes!!" discussion.WeatherdoG said:Or we could allow any citizen who is trained and willing to carry a firearm for the purposes of defending themselves and others.... If anyone(farmers, farmers mums...) who is trained can carry the need to make allowances for special groups(teachers, priests etc...) of armed people diminishes.
SACRAMENTO, California (Reuters) - A prominent Democratic California state senator and gun-control advocate was indicted by a San Francisco grand jury on charges of corruption and conspiracy to traffic in firearms, according to court documents released on Friday.